Israeli ex-president Moshe Katsav was freed from prison Wednesday after prosectors declined to appeal a parole board decision to release him after he served five years of a seven-year term for rape. Katsav, 71, did not speak to a crowd of journalists gathered outside the Maasiyahu prison near Tel Aviv as he left while surrounded by family. He was convicted in December 2010 of two counts of rape, sexual harassment, indecent acts and obstruction of justice.
The Iran-born bureaucrat, who rose from impoverished origins as a child immigrant, resigned from the largely ceremonial role of president in June 2007 and became an outcast of the political establishment. When he entered prison in December 2011, he became the first former president to be jailed in Israel since its creation in 1948. Katsav had been rejected twice by the parole board since he became eligible for the customary one-third reduction for good behaviour.
He had maintained his innocence, and his previous applications were turned down in part because he had expressed no remorse over his crimes and undergone no rehabilitative process. Women's rights groups had especially criticised his refusal to acknowledge the facts that led to his conviction and to express regrets. Israeli media reported, however, that the parole board in its latest decision, announced on Sunday, found that Katsav had more recently "undergone a change".
"The prisoner was asked many questions by the committee members regarding the circumstances of the offence, the victims' positions, his attitude to the victims and his understanding of his acts and their consequences, and the committee members were impressed by the honesty of his intentions," Haaretz newspaper reported the board as saying. Israel's justice ministry announced Wednesday that prosecutors would not appeal the parole board's decision.


















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